Building mentoring relationships that honor different experiences and identities while transmitting knowledge and creating accountability.
Sor Juana had mentors—bishops, scholars, and patrons—but also defined her own intellectual path. She both received guidance and rejected authority that constrained her. Intersectional mentorship across difference means relationships characterized by mutual respect, explicit power analysis, and willingness to learn from those different from yourself. Effective mentorship in this framework: acknowledges power differences without pretending they don't exist; challenges the mentee to grow while validating their lived experience; recognizes that mentors have blind spots related to their privilege; and celebrates the mentee's distinctive vision rather than demanding replication. It differs from traditional mentorship by making identities and systemic contexts explicit rather than invisible. Practitioners build these relationships by: seeking mentors from different backgrounds who can teach and challenge; offering mentorship to those with different identities and learning from them; creating mentorship collectives rather than dyadic relationships; and prioritizing mentorship as political work that strengthens movements. These relationships combat isolation, transmit wisdom, and build the trust necessary for intersectional organizing.
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